Arguments against theistic evolution: Difference between revisions

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::''Place rebuttals to these arguments on: [[Arguments for theistic evolution]]''
::''Place rebuttals to these arguments on: [[Arguments for theistic evolution]]''


The primary challenge to [[theistic evolution]] is the [[genealogical record]] in the Bible, and the plain or historical-grammatical reading of scripture ([[exegesis]]). Many theistic evolutionists believe that [[Adam]] was not a real man, yet the Bible clearly treats him as such within the books of [[Genesis]] and Chronicles, which contain the ancestral record from Adam to [[Noah]]. The book of [[Luke]] repeats this genealogy from Adam to [[Jesus]].   
The primary '''arguments against theistic evolution''' are the [[genealogical record]] in the Bible, and the plain or historical-grammatical reading of scripture ([[exegesis]]). Many theistic evolutionists believe that [[Adam]] was not a real man, yet the Bible clearly treats him as such within the books of [[Genesis]] and Chronicles, which contain the ancestral record from Adam to [[Noah]]. The book of [[Luke]] repeats this genealogy from Adam to [[Jesus]].   


Those who criticize [[theistic evolution]] frequently argue that [[Genesis]] is so inextricably intertwined with Judaeo-Christian-Islamic theism as to be inseparable. While the first chapter of Genesis may be interpreted as allegory; the creationism theme runs throughout the rest of Genesis and into the New Testament.
Those who criticize [[theistic evolution]] frequently argue that [[Genesis]] is so inextricably intertwined with Judaeo-Christian-Islamic theism as to be inseparable. While the first chapter of Genesis may be interpreted as allegory; the creationism theme runs throughout the rest of Genesis and into the New Testament.
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